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Be Here Now (album)

Be Here Now
BeHereNowcover.jpg
Studio album by Oasis
Released 21 August 1997
Recorded 7 October 1996 – 2 April 1997
Studio Abbey Road Studios, AIR Studios, Orinoco Studios and Master Rock in London; Ridge Farm, Surrey
Genre Britpop
Length 71:33
Label Creation
Producer
Oasis chronology
(What's the Story) Morning Glory?
(1995)
Be Here Now
(1997)
The Masterplan
(1998)
Singles from Be Here Now
  1. "D'You Know What I Mean?"
    Released: 7 July 1997
  2. "Stand by Me"
    Released: 22 September 1997
  3. "All Around the World"
    Released: 12 January 1998
  4. "Don't Go Away"
    Released: 19 February 1998 (Japan only)
Original release
Review scores
Source Rating
AllMusic 3.5/5 stars
Chicago Sun-Times 4/4 stars
Entertainment Weekly B
Los Angeles Times 3.5/4 stars
NME 8/10
Pitchfork Media 7.9/10
Q 5/5 stars
Rolling Stone 4/5 stars
The Rolling Stone Album Guide 2.5/5 stars
Spin 6/10
2016 reissue
Aggregate scores
Source Rating
Metacritic 57/100
Review scores
Source Rating
Clash 8/10
Drowned in Sound 5/10
Pitchfork Media 5.3/10

Be Here Now is the third studio album by the English rock band Oasis, released on 21 August 1997 by Creation Records. Oasis had achieved worldwide success with their 1994 debut album Definitely Maybe and 1995 follow up (What's the Story) Morning Glory?. The third album was highly anticipated by both fans and music critics. Oasis' management company, Ignition, were aware of the dangers of overexposure, and before release sought to control the media's access to the album. The campaign included limiting pre-release radio airplay and forcing journalists to sign gag orders. The tactics resulted in the alienation of both the press and many industry personnel connected with the band, and fueled large-scale speculation and wide publicity within the British music scene.

On the first day of release, Be Here Now sold over 424,000 copies, becoming the fastest-selling album in British chart history, while initial reviews were overwhelmingly positive. Retrospectively, however, the album is viewed by many music journalists and fans and by most members of the band as over-indulgent and bloated.Q magazine, which gave the album a five-star review on its release, admitted in 2007 that Be Here Now is often thought of as "a disastrous, overblown folly—the moment when Oasis, their judgement clouded by drugs and blanket adulation, ran aground on their own sky-high self-belief." The album's producer Owen Morris said the recording sessions were marred by arguments and drug abuse, and that the band's only motivations were commercial. As of 2008, the album had sold eight million copies worldwide.

By the summer of 1996, Oasis were widely considered, according to guitarist Noel Gallagher, "the biggest band in the world ... bigger than, dare I say it, fucking God." The commercial success of the band's two previous albums had resulted in media frenzy and an ubiquity in the mainstream press that was in danger of leading to a backlash. Oasis members were by then being invited to functions at 10 Downing Street by Prime Minister Tony Blair and holidaying with Johnny Depp and Kate Moss in Mick Jagger's villa in Mustique. During their last stay on the island, Noel wrote the majority of the songs that would make up Oasis's third album. He had suffered from writer's block during the previous winter, and has since admitted he wrote only a single guitar riff in the six months following the release of (What's the Story) Morning Glory?. After a few weeks "idling", he disciplined himself to a routine of songwriting where he would go "into this room in the morning, come out for lunch, go back in, come out for dinner, go back in, then go to bed." Noel has later said about the album "... most of the songs were written before I even got a record deal, I went away and wrote the lyrics in about two weeks." The band's producer Owen Morris joined Gallagher later with a TASCAM 8-track recorder, and they recorded demos with a drum machine and a keyboard.


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